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Letters 00
EPP May 2000 Letter on Facilities
and the Class Size Reduction Program
May 24, 2000
Hon. Rudolph W. Giuliani
Mayor of New York City
City Hall, New York, NY 10007
Hon. Peter F. Vallone
Speaker of the New York City Council
City Hall, New York, NY 10007
Chancellor Harold O. Levy
NYC Board of Education
110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Dear Mayor Giuliani, Speaker Vallone and Chancellor
Levy:
The Educational Priorities Panel
is a coalition of civic, religious, and parent organizations that work
together to monitor how budget decisions impact New York City public school
children. Though your strategies for improving schools may differ on some
points, we know that all three of you share the objective of raising student
academic performance. During the next school year, New York City will
receive $154 million in state and federal funding for smaller classes.
As negotiations over the city budget for fiscal year 2000-01 proceed,
the city needs to make its contribution to this important initiative by
providing classroom space on a priority basis.
EPP members strongly believe that reducing class size to
an average of 20 students in the early grades could be the beginning of
a turnaround for city public schools. Although state testing results over
the last four years show that New York City elementary school students
have pulled ahead of students from the other four large cities, there
still remains a 20-point "gap" on average test scores between
New York City students and those in the rest of the state. This gap can
be narrowed if the reduced class size initiative is supported by good
planning.
The first year of implementation of smaller class size has
gone well. Enclosed you will find our recently released monitoring study,
Smaller is Better: First-hand Reports of Early Grade Class Size Reduction
in New York City Public Schools, which documents the positive impact
of reduced class size on childrens learning to date. It ends with
a discussion of ways in which the program could be strengthened and the
need for continuity. Finding additional classroom space is key.
We ask that the Board of Education and the city prepare
a $69.5 million facilities plan for the 2000-01 and 2001-02 school years
that creates additional classroom capacity through leasing so that as
many young children as possible gain the maximum benefits from class size
reduction. To achieve this goal, 1,727 new k-3 classes should be formed
within the next two years. At a minimum, 720 new classes need to be created
by next fall in schools that have already begun reducing class
size so that their students can continue to be in smaller classes. Research
indicates that young students need to remain in smaller classes
for at least two consecutive years in order for them to improve
their achievement levels.
Given the limitations on the citys Capital Budget
and the speed at which classrooms need to be made available, we urge you
to consider an increase in the Expense Budget earmarked for creating additional
(k-3) classroom space through leasing. Based on an annual estimated per-seat
leasing cost of $1,184 provided to us by the Independent Budget Office,
EPP recommends:
- $20.5 million increase in the Board
of Education budget for FY 2000-01 to lease classroom space for 720
newly created classes and 144 classrooms for cluster teachers.
- $49.1 million increase in the Board
of Education budget for FY 2001-02 to lease classroom space for 1,727
classrooms and 345 classrooms for cluster teachers. (This figure includes
the 864 leased classrooms of the previous school year.)
These funds can be used to create small schools, Early Childhood
Centers, and early-grade annexes. We understand that these new leases
will involve a Capital Budget commitment of anywhere from $295.7 million
to $707.1 million for renovations, depending on the extent of renovations
and whether they are done by landlords or the Board of Education. Portable
classrooms are another way of providing space for overcrowded schools,
but EPP members suggest that they be used primarily for school staff or
for cluster classrooms. This investment, along with the pay-as-you-go
school construction initiative of the Speaker and the construction-for-leasing
proposals of the Schoolhouse Foundation and NYC School Construction Working
Group, all of which EPP supports, would begin to bring down early-grade
class size to the state average. More importantly, it would help to bring
New York City students up to the state average for academic performance.
Research findings on smaller class size are compelling.
The STAR assessment conducted for the state of Tennessee, Dr. Harold Wenglinskys
report for the Educational Testing Service, and the University of Wisconsins
continuing evaluation of the SAGE program show a powerful relationship
between student achievement and class size. They also find that the largest
gains were among low-income students in large cities. If children enter
small classes at kindergarten or first grade and then remain in
smaller classes for another two to three years, their academic achievement
puts them six months to a year ahead of their counterparts who remain
in larger classes. Unfortunately, in some large-scale implementations
of class size reduction, such as the one in California, children have
bounced around from small classes to large ones, undercutting its effectiveness.
Without a New York City facilities plan to ensure grade continuity
for children now in smaller class sizes, we risk duplicating Californias
experience.
At both the Congressional and State Legislative levels,
there has been fierce opposition to providing direct funding to school
districts for the salaries and benefits of newly hired teachers and, in
particular, to the allocation of most of these funds to large cities.
This city is receiving 7% of the Congressional allocation for smaller
classes, far exceeding our proportion of the nations total student
population, and 65% of the State Legislatures allocation, again
far exceeding our proportion of the states total student population.
In the wake of a historic lawsuit, brought by the Campaign for Fiscal
Equity to challenge the states system of funding public schools,
it would be tragic to send a public message to Albany that New York City
is not making a substantial effort to maximize this funding for new teachers.
Similarly, at a time when there is a bipartisan effort led
by Congressmembers Rangel and Johnson to make the federal government a
significant partner in the effort to repair the aging infrastructure of
the nations school buildings, New York can show by example that
facilities funding is part of the strategy to raise the academic achievement
levels of students in urban cities. Absent this example, the lack of a
turnaround of school performance in the Kansas City, Missouri school district
after a $2 billion facilities investment will continue to remain a strong
argument against federal funding for school repair and new construction.
A parallel with crime reduction comes to mind. State and
federal funds to hire more police became available because there was some
assurance that the city had strategies in place to use these dollars effectively,
and the results have been impressive. In many city elementary schools,
young children are reading books and writing essays when just a few years
ago they were just filling in the blanks in workbooks. But these students
need the individual attention and small group instruction that can increase
this type of learning to meet high standards. Now that federal and state
funds are available to hire teachers and the instructional strategies
for early-grade instruction are in place, the city needs to make a commitment
to find the classroom space.
Sincerely,
Marilyn Braveman, Chairperson
Noreen Connell, Executive Director
CC
Comptroller Alan G. Hevesi
Public Advocate Mark Green
Members of the City Council
Members of the Board of Education
Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer
Brooklyn Borough President Howard Golden
Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields
Queens Borough President Claire Shulman
Staten Island Borough President Guy Molinari
Deputy Mayor Anthony P. Coles
Deputy Chancellor for Instruction Judith Rizzo
Deputy Chancellor for Operations David Klasfeld
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